I found this interesting thylacine image I have not seen before
via
General Zoology. Written by Mary J. Guthrie and John M. Anderson. 1957.
Internet Archive
Australian thylacine stamp from 1962.
Ah thank you for the tag!
(I rarely check my notifications ahevshagsha)
This is one of my favorite images/films ðŸ˜
Still from a film of "Benjamin," the last known thylacine, at feeding time By: David Fleay 1933
I'VE BEEN SUMMONED
Can't wait to see how these come out recolored!
Some beautiful 35mm stills from a 1928 film of three thylacines residing at the Beaumaris Zoo, Hobart. Stills taken by James Malley.
The thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger, is not a tiger. Nor is it a dog, a fox, or a wolf. It is an extinct carnivorous marsupial…
Uh oh sisters! It's Sad o'clock because I saw a thylacine at a museum again!
This is a portrait of them done at the national zoo in Washington DC by Gleeson.
She is thought to be depicted as the Joey in the pouch as at the size and predicted age the mother would not allow the Joey into the pouch so it was suspected the mother allowed her because she was sick. Poor baby. She passed in September when the family arrived in July.
Juvenile female thylacine skin and skull from the Smithsonian NMNH (USNM 115365). [x]
This individual was one of three pouch young that arrived along with an adult female; sadly, she was the only one of the joeys that did not survive to adulthood. She died in 1902 shortly after her family’s arrival at the National Zoo.
Size comparison of this skin to a full-grown adult (actually her male littermate) below from @thebrainscoop​ [x]. So smol :’(
I can guarantee these are real thylacines.
I do not think the recent photos that just came out are real :/ sorry yall.
These are stills from a 1928 Beaurmis zoo film by James Malley.
Apologies for the screenshots 😠idk how to get better quality images of the photos from the thylacine museum.
Preserved head of a female thylacine at Oxford University Museum of Natural History and a photo of the same animal when she was alive. This individual was captured in 1925 and sold to Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart, before being transferred to London Zoo in 1926. She died on the 9th of August, 1931. She was the last living thylacine to be exhibited outside of Australia.Â
Top photo by S. Sleightholme
Collection of media revolving around the Thylacine
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